Fall 2025 Book Club

Fall 2025 Book Club
The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity by Sarah Schulman
Hosted by the Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA)
Book club sessions will be in August - September 2025
Join the Center for Humanities & the Arts (CHA) for a discussion of The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity by Sarah Schulman (Penguin Random House, 2025). Free copies will be available to the first 150 people who (no CU Boulder affiliation necessary) who fill out this form.
How to Join
- Free Book Giveaway - The first 150 CU Boulder affiliates and local community members can pick up a copy of the book at the CHA office (Macky Auditorium Room 201 - CU Boulder main campus).

Free Book Pick Up Dates
Book Club Session Dates
Call for Discussion Leaders
About the Book Club
The CHA will host a book club this Fall 2025 to discuss Sarah Schulman's The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity.
For those who seek to combat injustice, solidarity with the oppressed is one of the highest ideals, yet it does not come without complication. In this searing yet uplifting book, award-winning writer and cultural critic Sarah Schulman delves into the intricate and often misunderstood concept of solidarity to provide a new vision for what it means to engage in this work—and why it matters.
To grapple with solidarity, Schulman writes, we must recognize its inherent fantasies. Those being oppressed dream of relief, that a bystander will intervene though it may not seem to be in their immediate interest to do so, and that the oppressor will be called out and punished. Those standing in solidarity with the oppressed are occluded by a different fantasy: that their intervention is effective, that it will not cost them, and that they will be rewarded with friendship and thanks. Neither is always the case, and yet in order to realize our full potential as human beings in relation with others, we must continue to pursue action towards these shared goals.
Within this framework, Schulman examines a range of case studies, from the fight for abortion rights in post-Franco Spain, to NYC’s AIDS activism in the 1990s, to the current wave of campus protest movements against Israel’s war on Gaza, and her own experience growing up as a queer female artist in male dominated culture industries. Drawing parallels between queer, Palestinian, feminist, and artistic struggles for justice, Schulman challenges the traditional notion of solidarity as a simple union of equals, arguing that in today’s world of globalized power structures, true solidarity requires the collaboration of bystanders and conflicted perpetrators with the excluded and oppressed. That action comes at a cost, and is not always effective. And yet without it we sentence ourselves to a world without progressive change towards visions of liberation.
By turns challenging, inspiring, pragmatic, and poetic, The Fantasy and Necessity of Solidarity provides a much-needed path for how we can work together to create a more just, more equitable present and future.
For any questions regarding the book club, reach out to the CHA team at cu-cha@colorado.edu.